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The Iliad of Homer - Get a Free Blog
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His mournful followers, with assistant<br />
care,<br />
<strong>The</strong> groaning hero to his chariot<br />
bear;<br />
His foaming coursers, swifter than<br />
the wind,<br />
Speed to the town, and leave the<br />
war behind.<br />
When now they touch'd the mead's<br />
enamell'd side,<br />
Where gentle Xanthus rolls his easy<br />
tide,<br />
With watery drops the chief they<br />
sprinkle round,<br />
Placed on the margin <strong>of</strong> the flowery<br />
ground.<br />
Raised on his knees, he now ejects<br />
the gore;<br />
Now faints anew, low-sinking on<br />
the shore;<br />
By fits he breathes, half views the<br />
fleeting skies,
[pg 265] Clanks on the field, a dead and hollow sound. Loud shouts <strong>of</strong> triumph fill the crowded plain; Greece sees, in hope, Troy's great defender slain: All spring to seize him; storms <strong>of</strong> arrows fly, And thicker javelins intercept the sky. In vain an iron tempest hisses round; He lies protected, and without a wound. 238 Polydamas, Agenor the divine, <strong>The</strong> pious warrior <strong>of</strong> Anchises' line, And each bold leader <strong>of</strong> the Lycian band, With covering shields (a friendly circle) stand,
His mournful followers, with assistant care, <strong>The</strong> groaning hero to his chariot bear; His foaming coursers, swifter than the wind, Speed to the town, and leave the war behind. When now they touch'd the mead's enamell'd side, Where gentle Xanthus rolls his easy tide, With watery drops the chief they sprinkle round, Placed on the margin <strong>of</strong> the flowery ground. Raised on his knees, he now ejects the gore; Now faints anew, low-sinking on the shore; By fits he breathes, half views the fleeting skies,
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The Project Gutenberg EBook of The
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with notes by the Rev. Theodore Alo
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BOOK XVI. BOOK XVII. BOOK XVIII. BO
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VENUS, DISGUISED, INVITING HELEN TO
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GREEK SHIELD. BACCHUS. AJAX DEFENDI
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[pg ix] INTRODUCTION. Scepticism is
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cures in the Church. History and tr
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in which critics will allow us to b
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all written tradition, concerning t
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theis to manage his household, and
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they reached Ithaca. Here Melesigen
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They avowed their willingness to su
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heard him recite, acquainted him wi
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al habit. Whereupon Homer addressed
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[pg xv] Chandler, 12 "the most curi
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ecognized by a Samian, who had met
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is involved. With no less truth and
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orial office compels us to give som
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Are things which Kuster, Burmann, W
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to deal, and with the following bol
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and his associates, in reference to
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ler difficulty by running into a gr
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[pg xx] "At what period," continues
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the narrowest reading class in Gree
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still comparatively few, might have
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meric age, however the irregular us
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later, and it may fairly be suspect
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Olysseid. Could France have given b
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mann's 28 modification of his theor
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period of its first compilation." T
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ternal as external, enable us to ju
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of Peisistratus, while its historic
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next followed, as it aided the memo
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"While employed on the wild legend
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ship of the Homeric poems. To deny
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the history of a thousand minute po
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the capabilities of the same gentle
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nobling impulses of the soul; and t
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crowd in one mighty vision, or reve
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eading an heroic poem we must trans
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his nation the mirror, in which the
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Can we contemplate that ancient mon
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cient wit, the author of which was
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can see, with as much reason to Hom
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of the contradictory versions alrea
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er, I might have brought a large am
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POPE'S PREFACE TO THE ILIAD OF HOME
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Our author's work is a wild paradis
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wheel, by its own rapidity. Exact d
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for his imagination, and created a
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of story. If he has given a regular
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head, are by no means for their inv
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his own, that no painter could have
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thus, or the rest, In like manner i
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ion, that it was in this part Homer
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pecially, that he has scarce any co
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managed them) they are a sort of su
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that harmony which makes us confess
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Thus on whatever side we contemplat
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pours out his riches with a boundle
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make, commit something near extrava
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lent, as they are more contrary to
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fices then believed to belong to th
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of as they occur in the course of t
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make those accidents (such as the c
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lopped into form to give it a more
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aising and improving their author.
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at all. Simplicity is the mean betw
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antique cast. But certainly the use
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are introduced. For example, the ep
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they be tedious, the author is to a
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perhaps he endeavoured to strain th
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in. He seems to have had too much r
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attentively in comparison with Virg
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finite pleasure, the many friendly
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thor of the tragedy of "Heroic Love
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have experienced the candour and fr
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BOOK I. ARGUMENT. 40 THE CONTENTION
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[pg 002] the Æthiopians, at whose
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Extends the sceptre and the laurel
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Till time shall rifle every youthfu
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[pg 004] Till, safe at distance, to
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The pyres, thick-flaming, shot a di
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That sacred seer, whose comprehensi
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Not e'en the chief by whom our host
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To teach the Greeks to murmur at th
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The due reward of many a wellfought
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[pg 007] The man who suffers, loudl
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Inglorious slave to interest, ever
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[pg 008] Though mine the sweat and
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Go, threat thy earth-born Myrmidons
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[pg 009] Minerva swift descended fr
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"Forbear (the progeny of Jove repli
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And joins the sacred senate of the
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By this I swear:—when bleeding Gr
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Who thus with mild benevolence bega
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Do you, young warriors, hear my age
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[pg 012] Grant that the gods his ma
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A well-rigg'd ship for Chrysa's sac
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[pg 013] Pensive they walk along th
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Unskill'd to judge the future by th
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Sure to so short a race of glory bo
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The priest of Phoebus sought by gif
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But now he seized Briseis' heavenly
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The affrighted gods confess'd their
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Why have I borne thee with a mother
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Then down the steep she plunged fro
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Then near the altar of the darting
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The choicest morsels lay from every
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The parted ocean foams and roars be
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The thunderer sat; where old Olympu
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Thus Thetis spoke; but Jove in sile
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He spoke, and awful bends his sable
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The sacred counsels of almighty min
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That strives to learn what heaven r
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The feast disturb'd, with sorrow Vu
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Once in your cause I felt his match
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[pg 024] And Juno slumber'd on the
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[pg 025] BOOK II. ARGUMENT. THE TRI
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to the poet to enumerate all the fo
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And nodding Ilion waits the impendi
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[pg 027] To whom its safety a whole
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What scenes of grief, and numbers o
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[pg 028] A dream divine appear'd be
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Now, valiant chiefs! since heaven i
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[pg 029] Dusky they spread, a close
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Subjects all Argos, and controls th
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Must want a Trojan slave to pour th
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Before the blast the lofty harvests
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Haste, goddess, haste! the flying h
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Thus graced, attention and respect
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[pg 032] With words like these the
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And much he hated all, but most the
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[pg 033] Some captive fair, to bles
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The man who acts the least, upbraid
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While to his neighbour each express
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Till Troy's proud structures should
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Straight to the tree his sanguine s
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Thus spoke the prophet, thus the Fa
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[pg 036] And thunder rolling shook
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In arts of counsel, and in speaking
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[pg 037] With the huge shield each
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Then wise Ulysses in his rank was p
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The thighs, selected to the gods, d
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Blazed on her arm, and lighten'd al
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With rushing troops the plains are
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Jove o'er his eyes celestial glorie
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NEPTUNE. The hardy warriors whom Bo
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[pg 041] For flocks Erythrae, Gliss
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Where Anemoria's stately turrets sh
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The fair Caristos, and the Styrian
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Or close the embodied host in firm
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And Ægion, and Adrastus' ancient r
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While vainly fond, in fancy oft he
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[pg 044] Where the fat herds in ple
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Diores sprung from Amarynceus' line
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[pg 045] He led the warriors from t
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And saw their blooming warriors ear
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Next thirty galleys cleave the liqu
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Then, when the chief the Theban wal
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Where hills incircle Boebe's lowly
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Or where Ithome, rough with rocks,
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Where cold Dodona lifts her holy tr
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[pg 048] Their height, their colour
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And fires Typhoeus with redoubled b
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[pg 049] The foreign troops: this d
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(A mortal mixing with the queen of
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His fiery coursers thunder o'er the
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Thy groves of box, Cytorus! ever gr
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And proud Miletus, came the Carian
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[pg 051] BOOK III. ARGUMENT. THE DU
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Moves into ranks, and stretches o'e
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Now front to front the hostile armi
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Smit with a conscious sense, retire
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When Greece beheld thy painted canv
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Thy force, like steel, a temper'd h
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Then with his spear restrain'd the
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And different nations part in leagu
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[pg 055] Within the lines they drew
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So dreadful late, and furious for t
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[pg 056] Lean'd on the walls and ba
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But lift thy eyes, and say, what Gr
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[pg 057] "O bless'd Atrides! born t
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Then Helen thus: "Whom your discern
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Nor raised his head, nor stretch'd
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One bold on foot, and one renown'd
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Thus with a lasting league our toil
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Eternal Jove! and you bright orb th
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[pg 060] "Hear, mighty Jove! and he
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The lists of combat, and the ground
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[pg 061] Braced in and fitted to hi
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Destroy the aggressor, aid my right
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[pg Struggling he followed, while t
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The goddess softly shook her silken
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Struck with her presence, straight
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VENUS PRESENTING HELEN TO PARIS. Th
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Then, all dispersing, various tasks
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These softer moments let delights e
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Be therefore now the Spartan wealth
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Map, titled "Graeciae Antiquae".
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Menelaus, who is wounded, but cured
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[pg 068] Each danger wards, and con
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THE COUNCIL OF THE GODS. "Shall the
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That Troy, and Troy's whole race th
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At this the goddess rolled her radi
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And the proud Trojans first infring
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(In shape a mortal,) pass'd disguis
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'Twas form'd of horn, and smooth'd
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The gods forget not, nor thy guardi
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[pg 072] Then, with a sigh, that he
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Such mighty woes on perjured prince
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[pg 073] To whom the king: "My brot
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The shaft he drew, but left the hea
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[pg 074] Jove is with Greece, and l
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And clasp'd the warrior to his arme
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[pg 075] A cloud of heroes blacken'
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Then to the next the general bends
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Our great forefathers held this pru
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The solemn council best becomes the
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Whole troops before you labouring i
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(The warlike Sthenelus attends his
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Dared, and subdued before their hau
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The sons subdued, for Heaven was on
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Shields urged on shields, and men d
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The nations bleed, where'er her ste
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And shades eternal settle o'er his
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Brought forth the babe, their commo
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In act to throw; but cautious look'
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[pg 081] The great, the fierce Achi
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And quivering in his heaving bosom
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[pg 082] And counted heroes where h
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[pg 083] BOOK V. ARGUMENT. THE ACTS
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But Pallas now Tydides' soul inspir
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And first bold Phegeus cast his sou
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While we from interdicted fields re
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[pg 085] And everlasting shades his
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The hapless artist, while confused
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[pg 086] Which stain'd with sacred
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His bended bow against the chief he
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O give my lance to reach the Trojan
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With tenfold ardour now invades the
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Though now determined by Tydides' s
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Exploring Pandarus with careful eye
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And turns unseen the frustrate dart
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"Too late, O friend! my rashness I
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Practised alike to turn, to stop, t
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[pg 090] "O friend! two chiefs of f
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That both shall fall by one victori
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[pg 091] Pierced the tough orb, and
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O'er the fall'n trunk his ample shi
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His danger views with anguish and d
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The raging chief in chase of Venus
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The fainting chief, and wards the m
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And show'd the wound by fierce Tydi
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[pg 094] Then she: "This insult fro
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The shaft found entrance in his iro
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[pg 095] From fields of death when
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And, calling Venus, thus address'd
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[pg 096] So spoke the god who darts
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The god of battle issues on the pla
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Far distant hence I held my wide co
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On earth he leaps, his brazen armou
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Each Trojan bosom with new warmth h
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Dispersed and broken through the ru
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In dust Orsilochus and Crethon laid
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[pg 099] He thus advancing, Nestor'
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Meanwhile his temples feel a deadly
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[pg 100] And foam impervious 'cross
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His massy spear with matchless fury
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[pg 101] Sheathed in bright arms ea
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I make this present to the shades b
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Thy angry lance; which piercing to
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My helpless corpse, an unassisted p
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Stretch'd in their blood, lay gaspi
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[pg 103] Rich with immortal gold th
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Jove's cuirass blazes on her ample
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Commission'd in alternate watch the
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"Go! and the great Minerva be thy a
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[pg 105] Or foaming boars, the terr
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The goddess leaning o'er the bendin
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[pg 106] For Mars, the homicide, th
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DIOMED CASTING HIS SPEAR AT MARS. J
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Loud as the roar encountering armie
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All heaven beside reveres thy sover
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[pg 108] Inhuman discord is thy dir
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Juno and Pallas mount the bless'd a
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[pg 109] BOOK VI. ARGUMENT. THE EPI
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Dark showers of javelins fly from f
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By great Euryalus was Dresus slain,
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His headlong steeds, precipitate in
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Well hast thou known proud Troy's p
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Had not sage Helenus her state redr
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With offer'd vows, in Ilion's topmo
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Then thus aloud: "Ye dauntless Dard
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And meet a lance the fiercest heroe
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Approach, and enter the dark gates
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And the brave prince in numerous to
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A goat's rough body bore a lion's h
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[pg 115] (Fair e'en in heavenly eye
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Thus ever let us meet, with kind em
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[pg 116] We guard the friendship of
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In fifty chambers lodged: and rooms
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[pg 117] Inflaming wine, pernicious
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That pest of Troy, that ruin of our
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[pg 118] They fill the dome with su
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The steely point with golden ringle
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[pg 119] "Brother, 'tis just, (repl
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"Oh, generous brother! (if the guil
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Urge thou thy knight to march where
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Where late the mourning matrons mad
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[pg 121] Whom each soft charm and e
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And think'st thou not how wretched
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"By the same arm my seven brave bro
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Thrice our bold foes the fierce att
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Not all my brothers gasping on the
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And Hector hasted to relieve his ch
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[pg 124] She mingled with a smile a
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That stream'd at every look; then,
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[pg 125] And now, the warriors pass
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[pg 126]
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The battle renewing with double ard
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Both breathing slaughter, both reso
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Fierce she descends: Apollo marked
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At this agreed, the heavenly powers
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The thronging troops obscure the du
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But let my body, to my friends retu
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[pg 130] Go then! resolve to earth,
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Though bold and burning with desire
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[pg 131] How would he lift his aged
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Had given the vanquish'd, now the v
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And next his bulk gigantic Ajax rea
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Held out in order to the Grecian pe
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Grant thou, that Telamon may bear a
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As from a brazen tower, o'erlook'd
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To combat born, and bred amidst ala
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The blunted point against the buckl
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[pg 135] The sacred ministers of ea
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Let him demand the sanction of the
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He gave the Greek. The generous Gre
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When now the rage of hunger was rem
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So Greece to combat shall in safety
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But sound ungrateful in a warrior's
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And whose the conquest, mighty Jove
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[pg 138] The Greeks gave ear, but n
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Some search the plains, some fell t
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[pg 139] About the dying flames the
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Those radiant structures raised by
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[pg 140] With Bacchus' blessings ch
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[pg 141] GREEK AMPHORA—WINE VESSE
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Teucer, who is at length wounded by
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Back to the skies with shame he sha
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The all-mighty spoke, nor durst the
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Between the extended earth and star
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The sounding darts in iron tempests
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Nor each stern Ajax, thunderbolts o
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The glory of the Greeks, the Pylian
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Thus said the chief; and Nestor, sk
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The quivering steeds fell prostrate
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Not those who felt thy arm, the Dar
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Great Hector heard; he saw the flas
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And all your master's well-spent ca
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And see his Trojans to the shades d
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[pg 148] To Ajax and Achilles reach
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His vows, in bitterness of soul pre
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[pg The Atridae first, the Ajaces n
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The ranks grow thinner as his arrow
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Still aim'd at Hector have I bent m
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Headlong he falls: his sudden fall
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Or in the trench on heaps confusedl
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Now, in this moment of her last des
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When to grim Pluto's gloomy gates h
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[pg 152] The radiant robe her sacre
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JUNO AND MINERVA GOING TO ASSIST TH
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From Ida's top her golden wings dis
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She flew; and Juno thus her rage re
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[pg 154] THE HOURS TAKING THE HORSE
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Who shall the sovereign of the skie
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The goddess thus; and thus the god
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And drew behind the cloudy veil of
- Page 760 and 761:
[pg 156] Our steeds to forage, and
- Page 762 and 763:
The insidious foe the naked town in
- Page 764 and 765:
[pg 157] Shall crush the Greeks, an
- Page 766 and 767:
O'er the dark trees a yellower verd
- Page 768 and 769:
THE SHIELD OF ACHILLES.
- Page 770 and 771:
cil summoned to deliberate what mea
- Page 772 and 773:
[pg 160] Himself his orders to the
- Page 774 and 775:
And towers and armies humbles to th
- Page 776 and 777:
They gave thee not—a brave and vi
- Page 778 and 779:
Still first to act what you advise
- Page 780 and 781:
With Thracian wines recruit thy hon
- Page 782 and 783:
The king of men, on public counsels
- Page 784 and 785:
You wronged the man, by men and god
- Page 786 and 787:
Seven lovely captives of the Lesbia
- Page 788 and 789:
Yet more—three daughters in my co
- Page 790 and 791:
Who feels no mercy, and who hears n
- Page 792 and 793:
[pg 165] The monarch thus. The reve
- Page 794 and 795:
And large libations drench'd the sa
- Page 796 and 797:
Placed in his tent, attends the lof
- Page 798 and 799:
The brazen vase Automedon sustains,
- Page 800 and 801:
[pg 167] Not those more honour'd wh
- Page 802 and 803:
And must we, gods! our heads inglor
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[pg 168] If thou wilt yield to grea
- Page 806 and 807:
These instant shall be thine; and i
- Page 808 and 809:
Æpea fair, the pastures Hira yield
- Page 810 and 811:
What in my secret soul is understoo
- Page 812 and 813:
And sweat laborious days in dust an
- Page 814 and 815:
Slave as she was, my soul adored th
- Page 816 and 817:
[pg 171] The wealth he left for thi
- Page 818 and 819:
Not all the golden tides of wealth
- Page 820 and 821:
Content with just hereditary sway;
- Page 822 and 823:
Bid all your counsels, all your arm
- Page 824 and 825:
Attend the stern reply. Then Phoeni
- Page 826 and 827:
To shine in councils, and in camps
- Page 828 and 829:
They daily feast, with draughts of
- Page 830 and 831:
And Phoenix felt a father's joys in
- Page 832 and 833:
[pg 175] Due honours to the seed of
- Page 834 and 835:
This beast (when many a chief his t
- Page 836 and 837:
[pg 176] She beat the ground, and c
- Page 838 and 839:
The matrons ravish'd, the whole rac
- Page 840 and 841:
One should our interests and our pa
- Page 842 and 843:
And gifts can conquer every soul bu
- Page 844 and 845:
There cease his battle, and there f
- Page 846 and 847:
"Say what success? divine Laertes'
- Page 848 and 849:
With sorrow seized, in consternatio
- Page 850 and 851:
Then each to Heaven the due libatio
- Page 852 and 853:
and contriving all possible methods
- Page 854 and 855:
[pg 181] Sighs following sighs his
- Page 856 and 857:
So much had suffer'd and must suffe
- Page 858 and 859:
[pg 182] Such wondrous deeds as Hec
- Page 860 and 861:
This said, each parted to his sever
- Page 862 and 863:
No taste of sleep these heavy eyes
- Page 864 and 865:
Meges for strength, Oileus famed fo
- Page 866 and 867:
Assembling there, between the trenc
- Page 868 and 869:
He heard, return'd, and took his pa
- Page 870 and 871:
Ill fits thy age these toils to und
- Page 872 and 873:
[pg 185] And, couching close, repel
- Page 874 and 875:
In silent state the consistory crow
- Page 876 and 877:
What must not Greece to her deliver
- Page 878 and 879:
Then thus the king of men the conte
- Page 880 and 881:
The stars shine fainter on the ethe
- Page 882 and 883:
Thus sheathed in arms, the council
- Page 884 and 885:
Peace was his charge; received with
- Page 886 and 887:
[pg 188] Of yonder fleet a bold dis
- Page 888 and 889:
Even to the royal tent pursue my wa
- Page 890 and 891:
[pg 189] Moving this way, or hasten
- Page 892 and 893:
As when two skilful hounds the leve
- Page 894 and 895:
"O spare my youth, and for the brea
- Page 896 and 897:
And, tired with toils, neglect the
- Page 898 and 899:
Whose wives and infants, from the d
- Page 900 and 901:
In cruel chains, till your return r
- Page 902 and 903:
O speed our labours, and direct our
- Page 904 and 905:
[pg 192] Urge thou the slaughter, w
- Page 906 and 907:
Just then a deathful dream Minerva
- Page 908 and 909:
[pg 193] In haste he mounted, and h
- Page 910 and 911:
Ulysses stopp'd; to him Tydides bor
- Page 912 and 913:
[pg 194] Scarce had he spoke, when,
- Page 914 and 915:
Whose hostile king the brave Tydide
- Page 916 and 917:
[pg 195] They sit, rejoicing in her
- Page 918 and 919:
is pierced with an arrow by Paris,
- Page 920 and 921:
[pg 196] Even Ajax and Achilles hea
- Page 922 and 923:
And first he cased his manly legs a
- Page 924 and 925:
Ten zones of brass its ample brim s
- Page 926 and 927:
The squadrons spread their sable wi
- Page 928 and 929:
As sweating reapers in some wealthy
- Page 930 and 931:
On earth he turn'd his all-consider
- Page 932 and 933:
Atrides spoil'd, and left them on t
- Page 934 and 935:
Their bones he cracks, their reekin
- Page 936 and 937:
[pg 200] These words, attended with
- Page 938 and 939:
And the thick thunder beats the lab
- Page 940 and 941:
[pg 201] The path they take, and sp
- Page 942 and 943:
"Iris, with haste thy golden wings
- Page 944 and 945:
But when, or wounded by the spear o
- Page 946 and 947:
From sage Antenor and Theano sprung
- Page 948 and 949:
Till, grasp'd with force, he wrench
- Page 950 and 951:
[pg 203] And through his arm stood
- Page 952 and 953:
Sad mothers of unutterable woes!) S
- Page 954 and 955:
[pg 204] Lo, Jove himself declares
- Page 956 and 957:
As when a western whirlwind, charge
- Page 958 and 959:
And from his car the proud Thymbrae
- Page 960 and 961:
The far-famed hero of Paeonian stra
- Page 962 and 963:
And a short darkness shades his swi
- Page 964 and 965:
But pierced his foot, and nail'd it
- Page 966 and 967:
Steeps earth in purple, gluts the b
- Page 968 and 969:
[pg 207] And round him deep the ste
- Page 970 and 971:
He said, and forceful pierced his s
- Page 972 and 973:
[pg Ah, wretch! no father shall thy
- Page 974 and 975:
Great Ajax, like the god of war, at
- Page 976 and 977:
[pg 209] And lays Lysander bleeding
- Page 978 and 979:
And great Machaon to the ships conv
- Page 980 and 981:
O'er heaps of carcases, and hills o
- Page 982 and 983:
Then sourly slow the indignant beas
- Page 984 and 985:
Marks the dry dust, and thirsts for
- Page 986 and 987:
With pious care, great Ajax joins t
- Page 988 and 989:
The time is come, when yon despairi
- Page 990 and 991:
[pg 212] (Whom to his aged arms, a
- Page 992 and 993:
Meantime Patroclus, by Achilles sen
- Page 994 and 995:
[pg 213] Chief after chief the ragi
- Page 996 and 997:
Oppress'd, we arm'd; and now this c
- Page 998 and 999:
My sire denied in vain: on foot I f
- Page 1000 and 1001:
I seized his car, the van of battle
- Page 1002 and 1003:
How shall he grieve, when to the et
- Page 1004 and 1005:
Such gentle force the fiercest mind
- Page 1006 and 1007:
Weak was his pace, but dauntless wa
- Page 1008 and 1009:
[pg 216] Once taught Achilles, and
- Page 1010 and 1011:
HERCULES.
- Page 1012 and 1013:
The Trojans follow his counsel; and
- Page 1014 and 1015:
[pg 218] Then Ida's summits pour'd
- Page 1016 and 1017:
But this the gods in later times pe
- Page 1018 and 1019:
[pg 219] Just at the brink they nei
- Page 1020 and 1021:
But should they turn, and here oppr
- Page 1022 and 1023:
[pg 220] By orders strict the chari
- Page 1024 and 1025:
The moving legions speed their head
- Page 1026 and 1027:
[pg 221] This Polypoetes, great Per
- Page 1028 and 1029:
On every side the crackling trees t
- Page 1030 and 1031:
What man could doubt but Troy's vic
- Page 1032 and 1033:
And all her guardian gods, in deep
- Page 1034 and 1035:
Their martial fury in their wonder
- Page 1036 and 1037:
Then hear my words, nor may my word
- Page 1038 and 1039:
The leading sign, the irrevocable n
- Page 1040 and 1041:
[pg 224] With ardour follow where t
- Page 1042 and 1043:
Since not alike endued with force o
- Page 1044 and 1045:
[pg 225] The circling seas, alone a
- Page 1046 and 1047:
And shepherds gall him with an iron
- Page 1048 and 1049:
[pg 226] That when with wondering e
- Page 1050 and 1051:
And saw where Teucer with the Ajace
- Page 1052 and 1053:
Your strength, united, best may hel
- Page 1054 and 1055:
Prepared to labour in the unequal f
- Page 1056 and 1057:
Might stop the progress of his warl
- Page 1058 and 1059:
And through his buckler drove the t
- Page 1060 and 1061:
One foot, one inch, of the contende
- Page 1062 and 1063:
[pg 229] Shoots up, and all the ris
- Page 1064 and 1065:
And seems a match for more than mor
- Page 1066 and 1067:
[pg 230] BOOK XIII. ARGUMENT. THE F
- Page 1068 and 1069:
The eight-and-twentieth day still c
- Page 1070 and 1071:
Whose waving woods o'erhung the dee
- Page 1072 and 1073:
His whirling wheels the glassy surf
- Page 1074 and 1075:
The heavens re-echo, and the shores
- Page 1076 and 1077:
There Greece has strength: but this
- Page 1078 and 1079:
Favouring descends, and wills to st
- Page 1080 and 1081:
While tears of rage stand burning i
- Page 1082 and 1083:
A prey to every savage of the wood:
- Page 1084 and 1085:
Hark! the gates burst, the brazen b
- Page 1086 and 1087:
[pg 235] The close compacted legion
- Page 1088 and 1089:
The first of gods, this day inspire
- Page 1090 and 1091:
[pg 236] And blest in bright Medesi
- Page 1092 and 1093:
And just had fastened on the dazzli
- Page 1094 and 1095:
[pg 237] And breathes destruction o
- Page 1096 and 1097:
Wills us to fall inglorious! Oh, my
- Page 1098 and 1099:
Which to pale man the wrath of heav
- Page 1100 and 1101:
That shed a lustre round the illumi
- Page 1102 and 1103:
Against his bosom beats his quiveri
- Page 1104 and 1105:
[pg 239] So Mars armipotent invades
- Page 1106 and 1107:
These can the rage of haughty Hecto
- Page 1108 and 1109:
[pg 240] Thus by despair, hope, rag
- Page 1110 and 1111:
For this, of Jove's superior might
- Page 1112 and 1113:
The great Idomeneus bestrides the d
- Page 1114 and 1115:
As when the mountain-oak, or poplar
- Page 1116 and 1117:
On his raised arm by two strong bra
- Page 1118 and 1119:
To wail his fate in death's eternal
- Page 1120 and 1121:
"Behold, Deiphobus! nor vaunt in va
- Page 1122 and 1123:
[pg 243] The bold Deiphobus approac
- Page 1124 and 1125:
And met the Trojan with a lowering
- Page 1126 and 1127:
[pg 244] Moves on in rank, and stre
- Page 1128 and 1129:
Though now unfit an active war to w
- Page 1130 and 1131:
The hollow helmet rings against the
- Page 1132 and 1133:
Along the chine, his eager javelin
- Page 1134 and 1135:
Disarm'd, he mingled in the Trojan
- Page 1136 and 1137:
But harmless bounded from the plate
- Page 1138 and 1139:
Pisander's spear fell shiver'd on t
- Page 1140 and 1141:
[pg 247] A princess raped transcend
- Page 1142 and 1143:
And the bold son of Pylaemenes slew
- Page 1144 and 1145:
[pg 248] Paris from far the moving
- Page 1146 and 1147:
With such a tide superior virtue sw
- Page 1148 and 1149:
(Young Ajax' brother, by a stolen e
- Page 1150 and 1151:
But skill'd from far the flying sha
- Page 1152 and 1153:
To some the powers of bloody war be
- Page 1154 and 1155:
Achilles, great Achilles, yet remai
- Page 1156 and 1157:
Some low in dust, (a mournful objec
- Page 1158 and 1159:
[pg 251] I scatter'd slaughter from
- Page 1160 and 1161:
The afflicted deeps tumultuous mix
- Page 1162 and 1163:
[pg The skill of war to us not idly
- Page 1164 and 1165:
Enormous boaster! doom'd to vaunt i
- Page 1166 and 1167: [pg 253] GREEK EARRINGS. BOOK XIV.
- Page 1168 and 1169: advantage of his slumber, and succo
- Page 1170 and 1171: [pg 254] His wounded eyes the scene
- Page 1172 and 1173: In lines advanced along the shelvin
- Page 1174 and 1175: [pg 255] Not Jove himself, upon the
- Page 1176 and 1177: Then, if impetuous Troy forbear the
- Page 1178 and 1179: [pg Is this a general's voice that
- Page 1180 and 1181: Lies whelm'd in ruins of the Theban
- Page 1182 and 1183: Beyond the missile javelin's soundi
- Page 1184 and 1185: And sent his voice before him as he
- Page 1186 and 1187: Safe from access of each intruding
- Page 1188 and 1189: [pg 258] Thus issuing radiant with
- Page 1190 and 1191: Whelm'd under the huge mass of eart
- Page 1192 and 1193: [pg 259] Whilst from Olympus please
- Page 1194 and 1195: And his hush'd waves lie silent on
- Page 1196 and 1197: [pg 260] Nor for the deed expect a
- Page 1198 and 1199: SLEEP ESCAPING FROM THE WRATH OF JU
- Page 1200 and 1201: [pg 261] Sat Sleep, in likeness of
- Page 1202 and 1203: Which held so long that ancient pai
- Page 1204 and 1205: [pg 262] Nor comelier Ceres' more m
- Page 1206 and 1207: Not even the sun, who darts through
- Page 1208 and 1209: [pg 263] To check a while the haugh
- Page 1210 and 1211: Thus arm'd, not Hector shall our pr
- Page 1212 and 1213: Pale mortals tremble, and confess t
- Page 1214 and 1215: And cursed the lance that unavailin
- Page 1218 and 1219: And seals again, by fits, his swimm
- Page 1220 and 1221: The soul of Ajax burn'd above the r
- Page 1222 and 1223: He spake, and smiled severe, for we
- Page 1224 and 1225: Drove through the neck, and hurl'd
- Page 1226 and 1227: [pg 267] Ye all-beholding, all-reco
- Page 1228 and 1229: BACCHUS.
- Page 1230 and 1231: submissions; she is then sent to Ir
- Page 1232 and 1233: [pg 269] His senses wandering to th
- Page 1234 and 1235: Nor pull the unwilling vengeance on
- Page 1236 and 1237: If truth inspires thy tongue, procl
- Page 1238 and 1239: Nor one of all the heavenly host en
- Page 1240 and 1241: Unmoved his mind, and unrestrain'd
- Page 1242 and 1243: But dare not murmur, dare not vent
- Page 1244 and 1245: Thus to the impetuous homicide she
- Page 1246 and 1247: [pg 272] Receive, and execute his d
- Page 1248 and 1249: Strives he with me, by whom his pow
- Page 1250 and 1251: No vassal god, nor of his train, am
- Page 1252 and 1253: "Great is the profit (thus the god
- Page 1254 and 1255: Seeks his own seas, and trembles at
- Page 1256 and 1257: Again his loved companions meet his
- Page 1258 and 1259: Even I will make thy fiery coursers
- Page 1260 and 1261: [pg 275] Soon as they see the furio
- Page 1262 and 1263: Fierce as he is, let Hector learn t
- Page 1264 and 1265: These drink the life of generous wa
- Page 1266 and 1267:
Though born of lawless love: from h
- Page 1268 and 1269:
The coursers fly; the smoking chari
- Page 1270 and 1271:
Exhort their men, with praises, thr
- Page 1272 and 1273:
Legions on legions from each side a
- Page 1274 and 1275:
He spoke; and, speaking, swifter th
- Page 1276 and 1277:
But, pierced by Telamon's huge lanc
- Page 1278 and 1279:
[pg 279] Dear as a parent, with a p
- Page 1280 and 1281:
Then, fired to vengeance, rush'd am
- Page 1282 and 1283:
[pg 280] Thy arms no less suffice t
- Page 1284 and 1285:
When happy nations bear the marks d
- Page 1286 and 1287:
How Hector calls, and Troy obeys hi
- Page 1288 and 1289:
His radiant arms triumphant Meges b
- Page 1290 and 1291:
But Hector's voice excites his kind
- Page 1292 and 1293:
[pg 282] With equal ardour Melanipp
- Page 1294 and 1295:
He said; and backward to the lines
- Page 1296 and 1297:
[pg 283] While stones and darts in
- Page 1298 and 1299:
He foams with wrath; beneath his gl
- Page 1300 and 1301:
[pg 284] Bursts as a wave that from
- Page 1302 and 1303:
The son redeem'd the honours of the
- Page 1304 and 1305:
With mutual honour, and with mutual
- Page 1306 and 1307:
But looks a moving tower above the
- Page 1308 and 1309:
And breathes fierce spirits in his
- Page 1310 and 1311:
Wounded, they wound; and seek each
- Page 1312 and 1313:
Of reverend dotards check'd our glo
- Page 1314 and 1315:
No aids, no bulwarks your retreat a
- Page 1316 and 1317:
[pg 288] BOOK XVI. ARGUMENT THE SIX
- Page 1318 and 1319:
[pg 289] While the black vessels sm
- Page 1320 and 1321:
Or may some meaner cause thy pity c
- Page 1322 and 1323:
[pg 290] "O man unpitying! if of ma
- Page 1324 and 1325:
"Patroclus! thy Achilles knows no f
- Page 1326 and 1327:
Go save the fleets, and conquer in
- Page 1328 and 1329:
Rage uncontroll'd through all the h
- Page 1330 and 1331:
And painful sweat from all his memb
- Page 1332 and 1333:
And smote his thigh, and thus aloud
- Page 1334 and 1335:
Buckles. The brave Automedon (an ho
- Page 1336 and 1337:
Grim as voracious wolves, that seek
- Page 1338 and 1339:
Eudorus next; whom Polymele the gay
- Page 1340 and 1341:
[pg 294] This stern remembrance to
- Page 1342 and 1343:
Ranks wedged in ranks; of arms a st
- Page 1344 and 1345:
But Peleus' son; and Peleus' son to
- Page 1346 and 1347:
Oh! be his guard thy providential c
- Page 1348 and 1349:
[pg 296] Thus from the tents the fe
- Page 1350 and 1351:
Unbless'd Protesilaus to Ilion's sh
- Page 1352 and 1353:
Forced from the navy, yet the fight
- Page 1354 and 1355:
His arm falls spouting on the dust
- Page 1356 and 1357:
Full on the juncture of the neck an
- Page 1358 and 1359:
But still at Hector godlike Ajax ai
- Page 1360 and 1361:
Fierce on the rear, with shouts Pat
- Page 1362 and 1363:
[pg 299] From their deep beds he bi
- Page 1364 and 1365:
And with unmanly tremblings shook t
- Page 1366 and 1367:
With this reproach his flying host
- Page 1368 and 1369:
Say, shall I snatch him from impend
- Page 1370 and 1371:
[pg 301] She said: the cloud-compel
- Page 1372 and 1373:
The starting coursers, and restrain
- Page 1374 and 1375:
[pg 302] The trembling limbs, and s
- Page 1376 and 1377:
The reeking fibres clinging to the
- Page 1378 and 1379:
For thou, though distant, canst res
- Page 1380 and 1381:
Stretch'd by Patroclus' arm on yond
- Page 1382 and 1383:
And send the living Lycians to the
- Page 1384 and 1385:
[pg 304] And, like an eagle darting
- Page 1386 and 1387:
An iron circle round the carcase gr
- Page 1388 and 1389:
[pg 305] Vain are thy vaunts; succe
- Page 1390 and 1391:
And stuck with darts by warring her
- Page 1392 and 1393:
Then Hector's mind he fills with di
- Page 1394 and 1395:
To the soft arms of silent Sleep an
- Page 1396 and 1397:
[pg 307] Of matchless swiftness, bu
- Page 1398 and 1399:
Epistor, Melanippus, bite the groun
- Page 1400 and 1401:
[pg 308] (Thy brother, Hecuba! from
- Page 1402 and 1403:
His front, brows, eyes, one undisti
- Page 1404 and 1405:
Stern Hector fastens on the warrior
- Page 1406 and 1407:
While on each host with equal tempe
- Page 1408 and 1409:
Long used, untouch'd, in fighting f
- Page 1410 and 1411:
Thus, by an arm divine, and mortal
- Page 1412 and 1413:
The fancied scenes of Ilion wrapt i
- Page 1414 and 1415:
[pg 311] The gods inspire it, and i
- Page 1416 and 1417:
But swift Automedon with loosen'd r
- Page 1419 and 1420:
[pg 312] BOOK XVII. ARGUMENT. THE S
- Page 1421 and 1422:
On the cold earth divine Patroclus
- Page 1423 and 1424:
Nor panther braves his spotted foe
- Page 1425 and 1426:
Let heaven decide our fortune, fame
- Page 1427 and 1428:
[pg 314] While the fierce Spartan t
- Page 1429 and 1430:
Thus having spoke, Apollo wing'd hi
- Page 1431 and 1432:
[pg 315] Did but the voice of Ajax
- Page 1433 and 1434:
The body to Achilles to restore Dem
- Page 1435 and 1436:
On Hector frowning, thus his flight
- Page 1437 and 1438:
The sword for glory, and his countr
- Page 1439 and 1440:
The strong he withers, and confound
- Page 1441 and 1442:
Now blazing in the immortal arms he
- Page 1443 and 1444:
No more officious, with endearing c
- Page 1445 and 1446:
[pg 318] Tor this, our wealth, our
- Page 1447 and 1448:
On thee, on me, perhaps, my friend,
- Page 1449 and 1450:
[pg 319] Whole Troy embodied rush'd
- Page 1451 and 1452:
The first attack the Grecians scarc
- Page 1453 and 1454:
[pg 320] Lamented youth! in life's
- Page 1455 and 1456:
Struck at the sight, recede the Tro
- Page 1457 and 1458:
[pg 321] "Oh lasting shame! to our
- Page 1459 and 1460:
Close in their ranks commands to fi
- Page 1461 and 1462:
But death and darkness o'er the car
- Page 1463 and 1464:
The mangled body bathed in sweat an
- Page 1465 and 1466:
First perish all, ere haughty Troy
- Page 1467 and 1468:
Circled their arched necks, and wav
- Page 1469 and 1470:
The field, and spread her slaughter
- Page 1471 and 1472:
No Greek like him the heavenly stee
- Page 1473 and 1474:
Each hopes the conquest of the loft
- Page 1475 and 1476:
[pg 325] Which pass'd the shield of
- Page 1477 and 1478:
Poor as it is, some offering to thy
- Page 1479 and 1480:
[pg 326] To thee the greatest in wh
- Page 1481 and 1482:
With riches honour'd, and with cour
- Page 1483 and 1484:
The affrighted hills from their fou
- Page 1485 and 1486:
Had graced the triumphs of his Troj
- Page 1487 and 1488:
What human strength and prudence ca
- Page 1489 and 1490:
"Now, now, Atrides! cast around thy
- Page 1491 and 1492:
So parts the chief; from rank to ra
- Page 1493 and 1494:
[pg 329] From his fair eyes the tea
- Page 1495 and 1496:
Myself, and my bold brother will su
- Page 1497 and 1498:
[pg 330] To whelm some city under w
- Page 1499 and 1500:
High on poised pinions, threats the
- Page 1501 and 1502:
[pg 331] BOOK XVIII. ARGUMENT. THE
- Page 1503 and 1504:
And now it rises, now it sinks by t
- Page 1505 and 1506:
Dead is Patroclus! For his corse th
- Page 1507 and 1508:
The circling Nereids with their mis
- Page 1509 and 1510:
How wretched, were I mortal, were m
- Page 1511 and 1512:
And thus the silver-footed dame beg
- Page 1513 and 1514:
[pg 334] New woes, new sorrows, sha
- Page 1515 and 1516:
Wrath and revenge from men and gods
- Page 1517 and 1518:
[pg 335] Soon shall the sanguine to
- Page 1519 and 1520:
The sea-green sisters plunge beneat
- Page 1521 and 1522:
But check'd, he turns; repuls'd, at
- Page 1523 and 1524:
Thy friend's disgrace, thy own eter
- Page 1525 and 1526:
[pg 337] Shall take new courage, an
- Page 1527 and 1528:
Struck from the walls, the echoes f
- Page 1529 and 1530:
Meantime, unwearied with his heaven
- Page 1531 and 1532:
JUNO COMMANDING THE SUN TO SET. "In
- Page 1533 and 1534:
[pg 339] Nor what I tremble but to
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And proud Maeonia wastes the fruits
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The worst advice, the better to ref
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One fate the warrior and the friend
- Page 1541 and 1542:
Beneath the vase, and climbs around
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Say, shall not I one nation's fate
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That placed on living wheels of mas
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THETIS AND EURYNOME RECEIVING THE I
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[pg 343] While I the labours of the
- Page 1552 and 1553:
And Vulcan's joy and duty to obey."
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To Troy I sent him! but his native
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As I shall forge most envied arms,
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And godlike labours on the surface
- Page 1560 and 1561:
The subject of debate, a townsman s
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Gold were the gods, their radiant g
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[pg 347] With new-made wounds; anot
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And last the children, in whose arm
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[pg 348] Here herds of oxen march,
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The youths all graceful in the glos
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[pg 349] The greaves of ductile tin
- Page 1574 and 1575:
Patroclus. The hero obstinately ref
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[pg 350] Then drops the radiant bur
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Then uncontroll'd in boundless war
- Page 1580 and 1581:
Lame with their wounds, and leaning
- Page 1582 and 1583:
I deem, their mightiest, when this
- Page 1584 and 1585:
[pg 352] But prints her lofty foots
- Page 1586 and 1587:
And stop the babe, just issuing to
- Page 1588 and 1589:
[pg 353] Whate'er Ulysses promised
- Page 1590 and 1591:
Can last a hero through a single da
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[pg 354] Thy words give joy, and wi
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And copious banquets, glad your wea
- Page 1596 and 1597:
Greece honours not with solemn fast
- Page 1598 and 1599:
A row of six fair tripods then succ
- Page 1600 and 1601:
The black-eyed maid inviolate remov
- Page 1602 and 1603:
[pg 356] The foaming coursers to th
- Page 1604 and 1605:
The first, the dearest partner of h
- Page 1606 and 1607:
[pg 357] Thy sweet society, thy win
- Page 1608 and 1609:
His hastening soul, and sinks him t
- Page 1610 and 1611:
And like a deluge pour'd upon the p
- Page 1612 and 1613:
The brazen sword a various baldric
- Page 1614 and 1615:
Ponderous and huge, which not a Gre
- Page 1616 and 1617:
Be swift, be mindful of the load ye
- Page 1618 and 1619:
Then ceased for ever, by the Furies
- Page 1620 and 1621:
[pg 360] BOOK XX. ARGUMENT. THE BAT
- Page 1622 and 1623:
The gods to council in the starry h
- Page 1624 and 1625:
And death stands ardent on the edge
- Page 1626 and 1627:
The vessels tremble as the gods ali
- Page 1628 and 1629:
[pg 362] With voice divine, from Il
- Page 1630 and 1631:
[pg 363] THE GODS DESCENDING TO BAT
- Page 1632 and 1633:
Æneas was the first who dared to s
- Page 1634 and 1635:
Were God my aid, this arm should ch
- Page 1636 and 1637:
Hereafter let him fall, as Fates de
- Page 1638 and 1639:
In elder times to guard Alcides mad
- Page 1640 and 1641:
And, so he moved, his javelin flame
- Page 1642 and 1643:
Sons he has many; those thy pride m
- Page 1644 and 1645:
[pg 366] With mean reproaches, and
- Page 1646 and 1647:
Conceal'd his godhead in a flowing
- Page 1648 and 1649:
From great Assaracus sprang Capys,
- Page 1650 and 1651:
(To meet the thundering lance) his
- Page 1652 and 1653:
[pg 368] Draws his broad blade, and
- Page 1654 and 1655:
And sons succeeding sons the lastin
- Page 1656 and 1657:
Till at the battle's utmost verge t
- Page 1658 and 1659:
Great as he is, our arms he scarce
- Page 1660 and 1661:
[pg 370] But shrinks and shudders w
- Page 1662 and 1663:
Beneath the shades of Tmolus, crown
- Page 1664 and 1665:
[pg 371] The lance arrests him: an
- Page 1666 and 1667:
Thus sadly slain the unhappy Polydo
- Page 1668 and 1669:
Then parts the lance: but Pallas' h
- Page 1670 and 1671:
And for the soul an ample passage m
- Page 1672 and 1673:
The purple death comes floating o'e
- Page 1674 and 1675:
So sweeps the hero through the wast
- Page 1676 and 1677:
CENTAUR.
- Page 1678 and 1679:
Vulcan, by the instigation of Juno,
- Page 1680 and 1681:
While fast behind them runs the bla
- Page 1682 and 1683:
(Late their proud ornaments, but no
- Page 1684 and 1685:
[pg 376] As trembling, panting, fro
- Page 1686 and 1687:
One hand embraced them close, one s
- Page 1688 and 1689:
[pg 377] Some demon urges! 'tis my
- Page 1690 and 1691:
Die then,"—He said; and as the wo
- Page 1692 and 1693:
Thus he rewards you, with this bitt
- Page 1694 and 1695:
Whose son encounters our resistless
- Page 1696 and 1697:
And on his foe with double fury fle
- Page 1698 and 1699:
[pg 379] The eternal ocean, from wh
- Page 1700 and 1701:
'Tis not on me thy rage should heap
- Page 1702 and 1703:
[pg 380] He spoke in vain—The chi
- Page 1704 and 1705:
Then blacken'd the wild waves: the
- Page 1706 and 1707:
[pg Still flies Achilles, but befor
- Page 1708 and 1709:
Oh! had I died in fields of battle
- Page 1710 and 1711:
And Hector's blood shall smoke upon
- Page 1712 and 1713:
With broken rocks, and with a load
- Page 1714 and 1715:
[pg 383] Increased with gore, and s
- Page 1716 and 1717:
At once consumes the dead, and drie
- Page 1718 and 1719:
[pg 384] He ceased; wide conflagrat
- Page 1720 and 1721:
Recall the flame, nor in a mortal c
- Page 1722 and 1723:
Which bears Jove's thunder on its d
- Page 1724 and 1725:
Jove's Cyprian daughter, stooping o
- Page 1726 and 1727:
The god of ocean dares the god of l
- Page 1728 and 1729:
[pg 386] Incensed, we heavenward fl
- Page 1730 and 1731:
How vain that martial pomp, and dre
- Page 1732 and 1733:
[pg 387] The scattering arrows, rat
- Page 1734 and 1735:
Shook with her sighs, and panted on
- Page 1736 and 1737:
High on a turret hoary Priam stands
- Page 1738 and 1739:
And gasping, panting, fainting, lab
- Page 1740 and 1741:
While I decline to yonder path, tha
- Page 1742 and 1743:
[pg 389] Untaught to fear or fly, h
- Page 1744 and 1745:
Smote on his knee; the hollow cuish
- Page 1746 and 1747:
[pg 390] And sudden joy confused, a
- Page 1748 and 1749:
Achilles drags the dead body at his
- Page 1750 and 1751:
[pg 391] With mortal speed a godhea
- Page 1752 and 1753:
Not half so dreadful rises to the s
- Page 1754 and 1755:
[pg 392] How many valiant sons I la
- Page 1756 and 1757:
Yet cursed with sense! a wretch, wh
- Page 1758 and 1759:
[pg And pour to dogs the life-blood
- Page 1760 and 1761:
So they, while down their cheeks th
- Page 1762 and 1763:
On my rash courage charge the chanc
- Page 1764 and 1765:
To die, or triumph, that, determine
- Page 1766 and 1767:
(A wider compass,) smoke along the
- Page 1768 and 1769:
And with them turns the raised spec
- Page 1770 and 1771:
No gods indignant blame their parti
- Page 1772 and 1773:
[pg 396] Their sinking limbs the fa
- Page 1774 and 1775:
"O loved of Jove! this day our labo
- Page 1776 and 1777:
[pg Dearer than all that own a brot
- Page 1778 and 1779:
Yet on the verge of battle let us s
- Page 1780 and 1781:
No further subterfuge, no further c
- Page 1782 and 1783:
But first, try thou my arm; and may
- Page 1784 and 1785:
And, all collected, on Achilles fle
- Page 1786 and 1787:
Of speech, unhappy! from thy dying
- Page 1788 and 1789:
"No, wretch accursed! relentless he
- Page 1790 and 1791:
He ceased. The Fates suppress'd his
- Page 1792 and 1793:
Since now at length the powerful wi
- Page 1794 and 1795:
[pg 401] With thongs inserted throu
- Page 1796 and 1797:
O'er the proud citadel at length sh
- Page 1798 and 1799:
[pg 402] O had thy gentle spirit pa
- Page 1800 and 1801:
Not e'en his stay without the Scaea
- Page 1802 and 1803:
[pg 403] "Ah follow me! (she cried)
- Page 1804 and 1805:
Her hair's fair ornaments, the brai
- Page 1806 and 1807:
[pg 404] From different parents, di
- Page 1808 and 1809:
Nor reach the goblet, nor divide th
- Page 1810 and 1811:
Useless to thee, from this accursed
- Page 1812 and 1813:
urial; the next morning the soldier
- Page 1814 and 1815:
[pg 406] "Not yet, my brave compani
- Page 1816 and 1817:
And twelve sad victims, of the Troj
- Page 1818 and 1819:
[pg 407] They urged in vain; the ch
- Page 1820 and 1821:
Along the grass his languid members
- Page 1822 and 1823:
No more our thoughts to those we lo
- Page 1824 and 1825:
And hears a feeble, lamentable cry.
- Page 1826 and 1827:
[pg 409] First march the heavy mule
- Page 1828 and 1829:
All mount their chariots, combatant
- Page 1830 and 1831:
[pg 410] Where to the day thy silve
- Page 1832 and 1833:
High on the top the manly corse the
- Page 1834 and 1835:
[pg 411] So spake he, threatening:
- Page 1836 and 1837:
To gentle Zephyr and the Boreal bla
- Page 1838 and 1839:
Swift as the word she vanish'd from
- Page 1840 and 1841:
Then sank the blaze, the pile no lo
- Page 1842 and 1843:
[pg 413] Till I shall follow to the
- Page 1844 and 1845:
Resplendent brass, and more resplen
- Page 1846 and 1847:
Lost is Patroclus now, that wont to
- Page 1848 and 1849:
Experienced Nestor gives his son th
- Page 1850 and 1851:
While with sure skill, though with
- Page 1852 and 1853:
Lest through incaution failing, tho
- Page 1854 and 1855:
At once the coursers from the barri
- Page 1856 and 1857:
[pg 416] Full on his neck he feels
- Page 1858 and 1859:
The next, though distant, Menelaus
- Page 1860 and 1861:
[pg 417] Still edging near, and bea
- Page 1862 and 1863:
With fainting knees shall labour in
- Page 1864 and 1865:
And, turn'd too short, he tumbled o
- Page 1866 and 1867:
Will learn their rashness, when the
- Page 1868 and 1869:
The well-plied whip is hung athwart
- Page 1870 and 1871:
"Behold! the man whose matchless ar
- Page 1872 and 1873:
This, who but touches, warriors! is
- Page 1874 and 1875:
[pg 420] So not a leader shall our
- Page 1876 and 1877:
So spoke Antilochus; and at the wor
- Page 1878 and 1879:
He said; and pleased his passion to
- Page 1880 and 1881:
Too true it is, deserted of my stre
- Page 1882 and 1883:
Go thou, my son! by generous friend
- Page 1884 and 1885:
And whom the Greeks supreme by conq
- Page 1886 and 1887:
[pg 423] In Theban games the nobles
- Page 1888 and 1889:
Whose arms support him, reeling thr
- Page 1890 and 1891:
The humid sweat from every pore des
- Page 1892 and 1893:
Still breathing strife, and unsubdu
- Page 1894 and 1895:
It stands the prize of swiftness in
- Page 1896 and 1897:
To him they give their wishes, hear
- Page 1898 and 1899:
She urged her favourite on the rapi
- Page 1900 and 1901:
[pg 426] Next these a buckler, spea
- Page 1902 and 1903:
Opposed in arms not long they idly
- Page 1904 and 1905:
[pg 427] If he be one enrich'd with
- Page 1906 and 1907:
He next invites the twanging bow to
- Page 1908 and 1909:
And Merion eager meditates the woun
- Page 1910 and 1911:
Here too great Merion hopes the nob
- Page 1912 and 1913:
[pg 429] BOOK XXIV. ARGUMENT. THE R
- Page 1914 and 1915:
terment. The scene is partly in Ach
- Page 1916 and 1917:
The ruddy morning rises o'er the wa
- Page 1918 and 1919:
HECTOR'S BODY AT THE CAR OF ACHILLE
- Page 1920 and 1921:
Awhile they sorrow, then dismiss th
- Page 1922 and 1923:
[pg 432] His birth deriving from a
- Page 1924 and 1925:
Her furious son from Priam to recei
- Page 1926 and 1927:
[pg Sad object as I am for heavenly
- Page 1928 and 1929:
Nine days are past since all the co
- Page 1930 and 1931:
"How long, unhappy! shall thy sorro
- Page 1932 and 1933:
Except, to place the dead with dece
- Page 1934 and 1935:
(Sad scene of woe!) his face his wr
- Page 1936 and 1937:
Thy age, nor touch one venerable ha
- Page 1938 and 1939:
And where the prudence now that awe
- Page 1940 and 1941:
And fell a hero in his country's ri
- Page 1942 and 1943:
(The pledge of treaties once with f
- Page 1944 and 1945:
[pg 437] The sorrowing friends his
- Page 1946 and 1947:
Forgive his anger, and produce the
- Page 1948 and 1949:
[pg 438] And thus consigns it to th
- Page 1950 and 1951:
On the mid pavement pours the rosy
- Page 1952 and 1953:
[pg 439] The brazen portal in his p
- Page 1954 and 1955:
O'er the wide earth, and o'er the b
- Page 1956 and 1957:
The afflicted monarch shiver'd with
- Page 1958 and 1959:
Hail, and be bless'd! For scarce of
- Page 1960 and 1961:
[pg 441] Forbade assistance, and en
- Page 1962 and 1963:
Untouch'd by worms, untainted by th
- Page 1964 and 1965:
[pg 442] To whom the latent god: "O
- Page 1966 and 1967:
Unseen, through all the hostile cam
- Page 1968 and 1969:
Whatever pity that stern heart can
- Page 1970 and 1971:
Thus stood the attendants stupid wi
- Page 1972 and 1973:
[pg 444] Nineteen one mother bore
- Page 1974 and 1975:
The old man's cheek he gently turn'
- Page 1976 and 1977:
Rise, then: let reason mitigate you
- Page 1978 and 1979:
Of his weak age, to live the curse
- Page 1980 and 1981:
A weak old man to see the light and
- Page 1982 and 1983:
Next, heap'd on high, the numerous
- Page 1984 and 1985:
To whom, composed, the godlike chie
- Page 1986 and 1987:
The gods themselves, at length rele
- Page 1988 and 1989:
Which round the board Automedon bes
- Page 1990 and 1991:
Forth, by the flaming lights, they
- Page 1992 and 1993:
The next, to raise his monument be
- Page 1994 and 1995:
[pg 449] To spare thy age; and offe
- Page 1996 and 1997:
To hail your hero glorious from the
- Page 1998 and 1999:
[pg 450] With plaintive sighs, and
- Page 2000 and 2001:
The sad companion of thy mother's w
- Page 2002 and 2003:
"O thou, the best, the dearest to m
- Page 2004 and 2005:
Now twice ten years (unhappy years)
- Page 2006 and 2007:
Twelve days, nor foes nor secret am
- Page 2008 and 2009:
The snowy bones his friends and bro
- Page 2010 and 2011:
[pg 453] CONCLUDING NOTE. We have n
- Page 2012 and 2013:
Helen, after the death of Paris, ma
- Page 2014 and 2015:
conclusion, I desire to dedicate it
- Page 2016 and 2017:
thus enlists their affections in be
- Page 2018 and 2019:
3. thai. Vit. Hom. in Schweigh Hero
- Page 2020 and 2021:
4. "Should it not be, since my arri
- Page 2022 and 2023:
8. 9. phoraes oi gar Kumaioi tous t
- Page 2024 and 2025:
11. 12. It was at Bolissus, and in
- Page 2026 and 2027:
17. 18. 19. 20. Compare Sir E. L. B
- Page 2028 and 2029:
22. 23. 24. See Tatian, quoted in F
- Page 2030 and 2031:
of Tasso, not only to recite it con
- Page 2032 and 2033:
26. bined may attain in a simpler a
- Page 2034 and 2035:
32. 33. 34. 35. 36. "The first book
- Page 2036 and 2037:
the army, which for nine years has
- Page 2038 and 2039:
41. 42. covers the victory, slays t
- Page 2040 and 2041:
harassed that territory. Strabo, ho
- Page 2042 and 2043:
poems, all deaths from unforeseen o
- Page 2044 and 2045:
53. Grote, vol. ii. p 92. "It is an
- Page 2046 and 2047:
57. which resembles that of the ant
- Page 2048 and 2049:
60. 61. ander, in Clem. Alex. vii.
- Page 2050 and 2051:
64. 65. Quintus Calaber goes still
- Page 2052 and 2053:
67. must have been one of the most
- Page 2054 and 2055:
69. 70. Restore their strength with
- Page 2056 and 2057:
73. 74. pennyworth of nuts is sold.
- Page 2058 and 2059:
75. From heaven, they fabled, throw
- Page 2060 and 2061:
77. 78. All but the unsleeping eyes
- Page 2062 and 2063:
81. 82. "As bees in spring-time, wh
- Page 2064 and 2065:
84. Then pledged the chief in a cap
- Page 2066 and 2067:
87. Heeren, "Ancient Greece," ch. v
- Page 2068 and 2069:
88. of what precedes, and do not co
- Page 2070 and 2071:
91. 92. Those critics who have main
- Page 2072 and 2073:
94. 95. 96. 97. —Tydeus' son, i.e
- Page 2074 and 2075:
source of the river to the highest
- Page 2076 and 2077:
101. Tu 'l sai; ma di tant' opra a
- Page 2078 and 2079:
102. scattered over the thousands w
- Page 2080 and 2081:
103. 104. comparing it with the all
- Page 2082 and 2083:
108. ies—they yet acknowledged in
- Page 2084 and 2085:
111. 112. 113. Dryden's Virgil, ii.
- Page 2086 and 2087:
115. stantly reappearing in the anc
- Page 2088 and 2089:
117. 118. 119. Merrick's "Tryphiodo
- Page 2090 and 2091:
124. "Thus having said, she turn'd
- Page 2092 and 2093:
129. 130. So Apuleius, l. c. speaks
- Page 2094 and 2095:
"Galen appears uncertain whether As
- Page 2096 and 2097:
135. 136. Then when I made the fore
- Page 2098 and 2099:
140. 141. 142. 143. His stature rea
- Page 2100 and 2101:
146. 147. "Paradise Lost," xi. 411.
- Page 2102 and 2103:
152. 153. 154. wound she had receiv
- Page 2104 and 2105:
157. 158. Unbarr'd the gates of lig
- Page 2106 and 2107:
160. 161. 162. 163. —Paeon seems
- Page 2108 and 2109:
165. 166. the sword."—Thirlwall,
- Page 2110 and 2111:
168. this task is not, as a general
- Page 2112 and 2113:
174. "The fifty nuptial beds, (such
- Page 2114 and 2115:
176. seems indeed probable, from th
- Page 2116 and 2117:
182. 183. helmet, in which they wer
- Page 2118 and 2119:
struction of the rampart. This take
- Page 2120 and 2121:
narrative, is the decree issued by
- Page 2122 and 2123:
seem to imply that he considered it
- Page 2124 and 2125:
Till Troy descending fix'd the doub
- Page 2126 and 2127:
195. 196. 197. —Ægae, Helice. Bo
- Page 2128 and 2129:
199. 200. And even the lowly valley
- Page 2130 and 2131:
202. answered the purpose.' (Hallam
- Page 2132 and 2133:
205. 206. 207. people, the Dolopes
- Page 2134 and 2135:
210. 181), was a sufficient reason
- Page 2136 and 2137:
From thy sweet lips the half articu
- Page 2138 and 2139:
214. 215. 216. 217. might be addres
- Page 2140 and 2141:
219. 220. "There's one did laugh in
- Page 2142 and 2143:
223. "Circled with foes as when a p
- Page 2144 and 2145:
226. Below the wall's foundation dr
- Page 2146 and 2147:
230. molgian," i.e. "milking their
- Page 2148 and 2149:
232. 233. 234. renders many notes u
- Page 2150 and 2151:
237. entage, and too ancient to all
- Page 2152 and 2153:
239. 240. "Paradise Lost," vi. 335,
- Page 2154 and 2155:
243. the Chersonese, near the city
- Page 2156 and 2157:
tracts little from the dignity of t
- Page 2158 and 2159:
245. —The destinies ordain.—"In
- Page 2160 and 2161:
246. from both speakers, that altho
- Page 2162 and 2163:
And, sunk in sorrow, hangs his lang
- Page 2164 and 2165:
250. 251. 252. 253. This is connect
- Page 2166 and 2167:
254. 255. The realms of Tethys, whi
- Page 2168 and 2169:
256. And Gorgons, whose long locks
- Page 2170 and 2171:
the imagery differs in little more
- Page 2172 and 2173:
the Grecian Mythology; it explains,
- Page 2174 and 2175:
261. 262. 263. "Swift from his thro
- Page 2176 and 2177:
266. 267. —The future father. "Æ
- Page 2178 and 2179:
of the Iliad, he has brought the ri
- Page 2180 and 2181:
272. 273. 274. —Beneath a caldron
- Page 2182 and 2183:
277. 278. the dignity of a princess
- Page 2184 and 2185:
281. 282. 283. —Thrice in order l
- Page 2186 and 2187:
285. 286. So Milton:— Dryden. "So
- Page 2188 and 2189:
289. 290. 291. On the prevalence of
- Page 2190 and 2191:
292. Presuming of his force, with s
- Page 2192 and 2193:
* * * * At once on th' eastern clif
- Page 2194 and 2195:
Coleridge are well worth reading:
- Page 2196 and 2197:
296. the earlier parts of the Iliad
- Page 2198 and 2199:
297. 298. yielding up the body of H
- Page 2200 and 2201:
299. feeling and softness of tone w
- Page 2202 and 2203:
nor familiar; not contemptuous, yet
- Page 2204 and 2205:
A Word from Project Gutenberg This
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derivative works, reports, performa
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Section 1.
- Page 2210 and 2211:
Gutenberg electronic works in your
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1.E.6. You may convert to and distr
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- Page 2222 and 2223:
1.E.9. bution of Project Gutenberg
- Page 2224 and 2225:
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- Page 2226 and 2227:
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- Page 2228 and 2229:
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- Page 2230 and 2231:
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- Page 2232 and 2233:
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- Page 2234 and 2235:
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- Page 2236 and 2237:
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